ducky23;842770883 said:
Ok, so why do fans of the Raiders, Vols and Trojans hate Kiffen so much? I am obviously not intimate with any of these programs, so I just have a very outsiders view, so I would be very interested to get an insider's perspective on what exactly what went wrong and why Kiffen is so horrible.
Raiders: I have no idea what happened here. To me, it looks like he just wasn't ready (at the age of 31?) for an NFL job (I mean who would be at that age and with that little experience). And then Al threw him under the bus. If its a fight between Al Davis v. Anyone, I'll tend to side with Anyone.
Tennessee: Started slow, but had some really good wins over top teams. Bought in a top recruiting class. Then bolted for SC just as Vol fans were warming up to him. Yes, he could've handled things better, but this also seems like something where Vol fans just overreacted because they are Vols fans and football is everything. I mean, how is this that different from Mooch? Were Cal fans burning **** in the streets when he left? He also had some minor recruiting violations here (which led to very minor penalties), but was found to have no major violations (this is a slight worry for me, but you gotta think he learned from his mistakes here)
SC: Had one 10-2 season and a couple really mediocre seasons (especially for SC standards), but this was during the probation era. So in my view, maybe a different coach could have done better with such heavy sanctions, but I still think Kiffen was unfairly made out to be the scapegoat for Petey's transgressions.
Again, I'm just looking at this from the outside, so someone please correct me. But, he's not the first one to get into a fight with Al Davis. And with the Vols and SC, those are just crazy fanbases that have impossible expectations. Especially the Vols fans who think they are football royalty, so they have a hissy fit when a coach leaves after 1 year cause Kiffen owes it to them for some reason to spend at least 3-4 years with them (even though he's offered his dream job)
Look, Kiffen said some stupid stuff along the way. Those minor recruiting violations weren't great either. But I have to believe he's learned from some of his mistakes now that he's older. But at every stop, he's been able to recruit. And he's had some successful seasons in some very bad circumstances.
I just don't see why some people make him out to be the devil.
Allow me to speak on this from a Tennessee perspective.
When he was first hired exactly eight years ago today, he promised that Tennessee would get back to winning championships left and right. He promised that we would beat our rivals consistently as long as he was there. He promised that the Volunteers would "sing 'Rocky Top' all night long after beating Florida," who along with Alabama was the scourge of the SEC at the time. He frequently made a fool out of himself by taking verbal cheapshots at our rivals. It turns out he was all bark and no bite, as the Volunteers only went 7-6, ending the season by getting blown out by Virginia Tech in the Chick-Fil-A Bowl.
He did recruit well, but he kept recruiting players with noticeable character flaws. The night he bolted for Southern California started a chain reaction that led to several highly-rated recruits jumping ship and leaving Tennessee in dire straits just 17 days before National Signing Day. If Tennessee had not hired Derek Dooley just three days after Kiffin left, we probably would have lost most of the non-early enrollees.
Oh, and speaking of that, defensive line coach and recruiting coordinator Ed Orgeron, who was just hired as the new full-time head coach at LSU, decided to go with him. He reportedly called the eight early enrollees and told them not to go to class, thinking that if they did not go to class, they could also jump ship and follow them to USC.
After all of the promises, all of the smack talk, all of the bravado, there were lukewarm results. Many people believed that he was going to be there for the long haul. That's the impression he gave many people within the Tennessee family and outside it, as well. And after one season, he was gone. Many people felt betrayed, lied to, and used.
Tennessee is a proud program. Everyone who has been associated with the Orange and White has an immense sense of pride in their school and their football program. I'm sure it is that way everywhere, especially at California. But understand that football is like a religion in Knoxville, across the state, and across the South. It's more or less a way of life. At times, Neyland Stadium can hold well over 100,000 for every home game. That shows you just how invested people are and have always been in Tennessee. They are among the ten winningest college football programs in history. We don't like to see our program as a stepping stone, but as a destination job.
I'lTo many, Lane Kiffin didn't see it as a destination job. It was a transition from his failed venture with the Raiders to his dream job at Southern California. Personally, I have no problem with him going after his dream job. For me, the timing of the move and the manner in which he left, an abrupt announcement and a 60-second, cursorily arranged press conference where he made said announcement and left without taking questions or explaining his decision rubbed me and others the wrong way. For many, though, it was a slap in the face. It was a stab in the back. And they weren't going to stand for it.
Another thing that is important to consider is that prior to Kiffin's brief tenure at Tennessee, the Volunteers had had only two head coaches in 32 years: Johnny Majors (1976-1992) and Philip Fulmer (1992-2008). We had been a model of coaching continuity during that time. From 2008-2010, Tennessee had three head coaches: Fulmer, Kiffin, and Dooley. This was tough for many Tennessee fans to swallow and while many blame Dooley for Tennessee's futility in this decade, others still harbor hard feelings for Kiffin for exacerbating it and turning Tennessee into a laughingstock.
I will say that the mattress burning and demonstrations on campus after his resignation were over the top and completely unnecessary. Thank God I was not there when it happened.
That's why it's even more painful to see Kiffin coaching offense at Alabama and coaching circles around Tennessee's defenses.
It all may seem trivial, but if you put yourself in the position of a Tennessee fan, alumnus, booster, administration, or his own players, you'll understand the hard feelings.